
to work alongside synonym | English Thesaurus

work
n
1 drudgery, effort, elbow grease (facetious) exertion, grind (informal) industry, labour, slog, sweat, toil, travail (literary)
2 bread and butter (informal) business, calling, craft, duty, employment, job, line, livelihood, métier, occupation, office, profession, pursuit, trade
3 assignment, chore, commission, duty, job, stint, task, undertaking
4 achievement, composition, creation, handiwork, oeuvre, opus, performance, piece, production
5 art, craft, skill, workmanship
6 out of work idle, jobless, on the dole (Brit. informal) on the street, out of a job, unemployed
vb
7 break one's back, drudge, exert oneself, labour, peg away, slave, slog (away), sweat, toil
8 be employed, be in work, do business, earn a living, have a job
9 act, control, direct, drive, handle, manage, manipulate, move, operate, ply, use, wield
10 function, go, operate, perform, run
11 cultivate, dig, farm, till
12 fashion, form, handle, knead, make, manipulate, mould, process, shape
13 be agitated, convulse, move, twitch, writhe
14 (often with) up arouse, excite, move, prompt, provoke, rouse, stir
15 accomplish, achieve, bring about, carry out, cause, contrive, create, effect, encompass, execute, implement
16 force, make one's way, manoeuvre, move, progress
17 (informal) arrange, bring off, contrive, exploit, fiddle (informal) fix (informal) handle, manipulate, pull off, swing (informal)
Antonyms
, n
1 ease, leisure, relaxation, rest
2 entertainment, hobby, holiday, play, recreation, retirement, spare time, unemployment
3 child's play (informal)
vb
7 have fun, mark time, play, relax, skive (Brit. slang) take it easy
10 be broken, be out of order
15 counteract, nullify, prevent, reverse
life work
business, calling, career, interest, mission, occupation, profession, purpose, pursuit, vocation, work
out of work
idle, jobless, laid off, on the dole (Brit.) out of a job, redundant, unemployed
work-out
drill, exercise, exercise session, practice session, training, training session, warm-up
work out
1 accomplish, achieve, attain, win
2 calculate, clear up, figure out, find out, puzzle out, resolve, solve, suss (out) (slang)
3 arrange, construct, contrive, develop, devise, elaborate, evolve, form, formulate, plan, put together
4 be effective, flourish, go as planned, go well, prosper, prove satisfactory, succeed
5 come out, develop, evolve, go, happen, pan out (informal) result, turn out
6 do exercises, drill, exercise, practise, train, warm up
7 add up to, amount to, come to, reach, reach a total of
work up
agitate, animate, arouse, enkindle, excite, foment, generate, get (someone) all steamed up (slang) incite, inflame, instigate, move, rouse, spur, stir up, wind up (informal)
- kleptocrat n. a person paid by the state to work in the interests of the nation who considers it to be a ‘right’ to be able abuse his or her authority to ensure personal gain for himself or herself at the expense of the nation…
neologism ... created on some blog
- grunt work n. grunt work is hard, uninteresting work
US informal
- WIP n. Work In Progress
can be used as an adjectif : this program is WIP
- a bang up job exp. work perfectly performed
When I asked the students to do their homework, they did a bang up job.
- crap around exp. 1.act silly; 2. avoid work
- Wirk v. A culture of internet only jobs has coined the phrase Wirk. Wirk simply means Internet Work.
Internet work is defined by job opportunities that did not exist before the rise of the internet and furthermore the work is likely to be carried out over the internet and payment received for work undertaken via the internet.
Wirk describes both full time and part time internet work. Because of the nature of Wirk and the ability for anyone that has internet connection to earn money from Wirk, it is currently more likely to be a part time occupation than full time.
Paid Online Questionnaires, Content Writing, Search Marketing are all examples of Wirk.
This is a term rising in popularity
- NSFW abbr. acron. Short for "not safe for work".
- darg n. 1. [UK] a day's work ; a task for a day 2. [Aus.] a fixed or definite amount of work ; a work quota.
formed by syncope from day-work. The tenants are subject to a darg (or day's work) for every acre.
- copyleft n. 1. using copyright law to make a piece of work freely available and allowing its free distribution and modification (as long as its derivate versions follow the same copyright rules)
- seafarer n. Any person, including a captain, who is employed or engaged or works in any capacity on board a ship and whose normal place of work is on a ship.
- workover n. work and operations made in drilling for maintaining petroleum or Gas wells effective
- haymaking v. 1. the operation or work of cutting grass and curing it for hay 2. the act of taking full advantage of an easy opportunity
- call it a day v. declare that you're done with work or other activity, and that you want to go out or rest or go to bed
- plug and play adj. 1. [Comp.] a device that once plugged in is automatically recognized by the system and launches the expected process without any action on the user's side; 2. [Bus.] a new employee who is able to start work without too much induction and training
can be used as both noun and adjective: plug and play device; plug and play employee or simply plug and play (noun)
- crowdsourcing n. using a lot of people (Internet users mostly) to contribute to a collective work. For example Wikipedia uses crowdsourcing
- follow-the-sun n. a type of work that goes on 24 hours from 24 hours because the teams performing it are located in various time zones.
E.g: Some claim that follow-the-sun is a business failure. It can be used also as a verb (Our team follows the sun ) or as an adjective (We offer follow-the-sun business support) .
Alphabetical index
Welcome to English-Thesaurus Collins dictionary ("Collins Cobuild English Dictionary for Advanced Learners 4th edition published in 2003 © HarperCollins Publishers 1987, 1995, 2001, 2003 and Collins A-Z Thesaurus 1st edition first published in 1995 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995").
Type the word that you look for in the search box above. The results will include words and phrases from the general dictionary as well as entries from the collaborative one.
alongside
This shows grade level based on the word's complexity.
[ uh-lawng-sahyd, uh-long- ]
/ əˈlɔŋˈsaɪd, əˈlɒŋ- /
adverb
along, by, at, or to the side of something: We brought the boat alongside.
preposition
beside; by the side of: The dog ran alongside me all the way.
Informal.alongside of,compared with: Alongside of his brother, he is no student at all.
QUIZ
ARE YOU A TRUE BLUE CHAMPION OF THESE "BLUE" SYNONYMS?
We could talk until we're blue in the face about this quiz on words for the color "blue," but we think you should take the quiz and find out if you're a whiz at these colorful terms.
Question 1 of 8
Which of the following words describes “sky blue”?
Origin of alongside
First recorded in 1700–10; along + side1
Words nearby alongside
along for the ride, along in years, alongships, alongshore, long shot, a, alongside, alongside of, along the lines of, along with, Alonso, aloof
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2021
How to use alongside in a sentence
We also discussed Crista Galli LABS, which operates alongside the main fund and backs founders from underrepresented backgrounds at the pre-seed stage.
Does early-stage health tech need more ‘patient’ capital?|Steve O'Hear|September 17, 2020|TechCrunch
Extending transparency to sources of medicines and their ingredientsFood package labels are required to contain the manufacturer’s name, address, and telephone number alongside the ingredients list.
The ‘inactive' ingredients in your pills could harm you|By Yelena Ionova/The Conversation|September 15, 2020|Popular-Science
Last year, alongside the Series 5, Apple continued to sell a version of its Series 3 Watch, which debuted in 2017, for under $200.
Apple’s ‘Time Flies’ event: 5 things to look for|Aaron Pressman|September 15, 2020|Fortune
We will continue to monitor this situation, and work alongside health and government officials as it evolves.
How the coronavirus outbreak is roiling the film and entertainment industries|Alissa Wilkinson|September 11, 2020|Vox
This saga was also timed alongside Epic Games’ broader complaints about in-app purchases on the games store.
Apple lays out its messy vision for how xCloud and Stadia will work with its App Store rules|Lucas Matney|September 11, 2020|TechCrunch
After a successful summer working alongside R, he officially offered her the reigns of La Domaine.
Dungeons and Genital Clamps: Inside a Legendary BDSM Chateau|Ian Frisch|December 20, 2014|DAILY BEAST
After fighting alongside her brothers for years in the 1980s, she demanded the women fighters be formally recognized.
Embedding With the Women Who Are Kicking ISIS Ass|Susannah George|December 15, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Alongside YOLO, “same damn time” is one of the most memorable recent additions to the lexicon.
Future Makes Us Rethink Everything We Thought We Knew About Rap Artists|Luke Hopping|December 15, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Most female peshmerga fighters were tasked with staffing checkpoints and guarding bases alongside their male counterparts.
Embedding With the Women Who Are Kicking ISIS Ass|Susannah George|December 15, 2014|DAILY BEAST
His death was particularly difficult for the veteran firefighters who had spent years working alongside him.
The Mystery Death Of A Female Firefighter|Christopher Moraff|December 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
A curious incident: during the night a Fleet-sweeper tied up alongside, full of wounded, chiefly Australians.
Gallipoli Diary, Volume I|Ian Hamilton
Huge, dim forms rushed alongside the embankment, making unearthly sounds.
A Lost Hero|Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward and Herbert D. Ward
One day at the end of the hunt he came alongside of her and they walked their horses home together.
Uncanny Tales|Various
Alongside this there stood another door, opening into a passage from which access might be gained to any part of the chateau.
St. Martin's Summer|Rafael Sabatini
Happily these signals at last had the desired effect, for at ten o'clock the boat came alongside.
Narrative of a Survey of the Intertropical and Western Coasts of Australia] [Volume 2 of 2]|Phillip Parker King
British Dictionary definitions for alongside
alongside
preposition
(often foll by of)along the side of; along besidealongside the quay
adverb
along the side of some specified thingcome alongside
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
come alongside synonym | English Thesaurus

come
1 advance, appear, approach, arrive, become, draw near, enter, happen, materialize, move, move towards, near, occur, originate, show up (informal) turn out, turn up (informal)
2 appear, arrive, attain, enter, materialize, reach, show up (informal) turn up (informal)
3 fall, happen, occur, take place
4 arise, emanate, emerge, end up, flow, issue, originate, result, turn out
5 extend, reach
come about
arise, befall, come to pass, happen, occur, result, take place, transpire (informal)
come across
bump into (informal) chance upon, discover, encounter, find, happen upon, hit upon, light upon, meet, notice, stumble upon, unearth
come along
develop, improve, mend, perk up, pick up, progress, rally, recover, recuperate
come apart
break, come unstuck, crumble, disintegrate, fall to pieces, give way, separate, split, tear
come at
1 attain, discover, find, grasp, reach
2 assail, assault, attack, charge, fall upon, fly at, go for, light into, rush, rush at
come back
reappear, recur, re-enter, return
come between
alienate, divide, estrange, interfere, meddle, part, separate, set at odds
come by
acquire, get, land, lay hold of, obtain, procure, score (slang) secure, take possession of, win
come clean
acknowledge, admit, come out of the closet, confess, cough up (slang) 'fess up (U.S.) get (something) off one's chest (informal) make a clean breast of, own up, reveal, sing (slang, chiefly U.S.) spill one's guts (slang)
come down
1 decline, degenerate, descend, deteriorate, fall, go downhill, go to pot (informal) reduce, worsen
2 choose, decide, favour, recommend
come down on
bawl out (informal) blast, carpet (informal) chew out (U.S. & Canad. informal) criticize, dress down (informal) give (someone) a rocket (Brit. & N.Z. informal) jump on (informal) lambast(e), put down, rap over the knuckles, read the riot act, rebuke, reprimand, tear into (informal) tear (someone) off a strip (Brit. informal)
come down to
amount to, boil down to, end up as, result in
come down with
ail, be stricken with, catch, contract, fall ill, fall victim to, get, sicken, take, take sick
come forward
offer one's services, present or proffer oneself, volunteer
come in
appear, arrive, cross the threshold, enter, finish, reach, show up (informal)
come in for
acquire, bear the brunt of, endure, get, receive, suffer
come off
go off, happen, occur, succeed, take place, transpire (informal)
come on
1 advance, develop, improve, make headway, proceed, progress
2 appear, begin, take place
come out
1 appear, be announced, be divulged, be issued, be published, be released, be reported, be revealed
2 conclude, end, result, terminate
come out with
acknowledge, come clean, declare, disclose, divulge, lay open, own, own up, say
come round
1 accede, acquiesce, allow, concede, grant, mellow, relent, yield
2 come to, rally, recover, regain consciousness, revive
3 call, drop in, pop in, stop by, visit
come through
1 accomplish, achieve, make the grade (informal) prevail, succeed, triumph
2 endure, survive, weather the storm, withstand
come up
arise, crop up, happen, occur, rise, spring up, turn up
come up to
admit of comparison with, approach, compare with, equal, match, measure up to, meet, resemble, rival, stand or bear comparison with
come up with
advance, create, discover, furnish, offer, present, produce, propose, provide, submit, suggest
- c'mon exp. come on
Slang; written abbreviation, there`s no difference in pronunciation for "c`mon "and "come on".
- come to heel exp. quit disobeying; start acting like someone would want to
E.g. Finally, her husband has come to heel and they will buy a new car, as she wants.
- come to grips with sth id. consider something seriously and start taking actions about it
- skyfall n. term coined by the James Bond movie, meaning that a great danger will come for Bond to overcome
anyone with a good definition ?
- go belly up v. die ; fail ; go bankrupt ; come to an end ; whether you're a fisherman or ever had a pet fish, you figure out that the phrase alludes to a fish typically floating upside down, belly up when dying.
Ex.: The study reveals that most startups go belly up within the first four years
- idea hamster n. a very creative person; someone who is always able to come up with fresh ideas
- instant tradition n. Something that as soon as it is done becomes decided upon to repeat the next year and years to come. Does not necessarily have to had been done previous years to be defined an instant tradition.
- pride comes before fall id. def.: if you are too confident about yourself, something bad will happen to show you that you are not as good as you think you are
- what goes around comes around id. expression used to point out that one will eventually face the consequences of his own actions
- peach n. a round and sweet fruit with pale, orange-colored skin that comes from a tree of the same name
- wingman n. 1. [Mil.] a pilot who comes in support of the leading aircraft. He is positionned besides and slightly behind the leading aircraft. 2. [Fig.] a person who helps a friend to approach potential partners
2. this meaning has been popularised by the TV series How I Met Your Mother
- top-down adj. something that is top-down comes from the top of a hierarchy and is passed down to the lower ranking members
- wing man n. someone who is providing advice and support for his mate when it comes to potential relationships/partners
- FAT (File Allocation Table) n. In computer science, the File Allocation Table (FAT) is a file system popularized by Microsoft in the 1980's in their earliest computers. The FAT file system has continued to be developed and now comes in multiple varieties such as FAT12, FAT16, FAT32 and ExFAT.
Look at that floppy disk, see if it is formatted with the FAT file system.
- a square peg in a round hole exp. a misfit; something or someone looking/behaving in a manner that comes in contradiction with the general context
Alphabetical index
Welcome to English-Thesaurus Collins dictionary ("Collins Cobuild English Dictionary for Advanced Learners 4th edition published in 2003 © HarperCollins Publishers 1987, 1995, 2001, 2003 and Collins A-Z Thesaurus 1st edition first published in 1995 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995").
Type the word that you look for in the search box above. The results will include words and phrases from the general dictionary as well as entries from the collaborative one.
Synonyms for Alongside:

What is another word for alongside?
932 synonyms foundPronunciation:
[ ɐlˈɒŋsa͡ɪd], [ ɐlˈɒŋsaɪd], [ ɐ_l_ˈɒ_ŋ_s_aɪ_d]adj.
•adjacent (adjective)•near (adjective)- along toward,
- hair breadth,
- vincinal,
- close-at-hand,
- in close proximity,
- near-at-hand,
- close shave,
- proximal,
- at close quarters,
- within stone's throw,
- approximal,
- close-by,
- hair's breadth,
- not remote.
- more back-to-back,
- more back to back,
- sub sequent,
- most attached,
- most coterminous,
- most meeting,
- back to back,
- more attached,
- more meeting,
- sub-sequent,
- more coterminous,
- most back to back,
- most back-to-back,
- on side.
- next,
- touching,
- adjacent,
- next door,
- parallel,
- back-to-back,
- near,
- ensuing,
- close by,
- coterminous,
- on the side,
- hard by.
a. & adv.
•Other relevant words: (adjective, adverb)adv
•Other relevant words: (adverb)- by oneself,
- Beside,
- aside,
- at the side of,
- contiguous to,
- close upon,
- from end to end,
- at the edge of,
- verging on,
- close to,
- from top to bottom,
- sideways,
- sidewise,
- next door to,
- cheek to cheek,
- side-by-side,
- fore and aft,
- adjacent to,
- fornent,
- the long way,
- at one's elbow,
- side by side,
- close at hand,
- a step from,
- in isolation,
- long way,
- connected with,
- in juxtaposition,
- Endlong.
adv.
•all (adverb)••- over-looking,
- at side of,
- at one elbow,
- at edge of,
- close up on,
- close hand,
- be-side,
- be side,
- at elbow,
- at ones elbow.
- fore aft,
- lengthwise,
- from stern stern,
- from end end,
- from top bottom,
- end-long,
- end long,
- from head to foot,
- from head foot,
- from stern to stern.
adv. & prep.
•n.
- •
- along the side,
- shoulder-to-shoulder,
- neck and neck,
- apace with,
- close to the side,
- next to,
- almost touching,
- close,
- on the same plane with,
- in company with,
- by or at the side of,
- equal with.
prep.
•by (preposition)••with (preposition)Other synonyms:
- •
- immediately,
- nearly,
- level,
- nearby,
- warm,
- NR,
- attached,
- immediate,
- closely,
- abreast,
- huddled,
- hereabouts,
- interlocking,
- together,
- convenient,
- neighbouring,
- thereabouts,
- connected,
- handy,
- locally,
- united,
- neighboring,
- neighbor,
- adjoining.
- broadsheet,
- office,
- keep up,
- forrard,
- doorsill,
- likewise,
- prevail,
- dismantle,
- duplicate,
- in the meantime,
- lee,
- ending,
- relation,
- proportional,
- attitude,
- accrual,
- cooccurring,
- lively,
- rethink,
- nigh,
- close call,
- fare,
- enamour,
- commodious,
- seed,
- narrow escape,
- experience,
- do it,
- like a shot,
- engagement,
- before,
- turned,
- bound,
- billet,
- end,
- happen,
- ring,
- handbill,
- number,
- roll in the hay,
- consanguineous,
- love,
- screw,
- go along,
- suspire,
- astatine,
- latitude,
- prevarication,
- recognise,
- affecting,
- have a go at it,
- skirt,
- trace,
- interlinking,
- sideward,
- postscript,
- stance,
- raze,
- comply,
- english,
- love seat,
- jointly,
- pass,
- bouncy,
- belong to,
- admission price,
- dispatch,
- neighbour,
- persist in,
- in concert,
- supplement,
- entree,
- interlock,
- go up,
- go,
- cubitus,
- rase,
- squeaker,
- henchman,
- shoulder joint,
- topically,
- spell,
- directly,
- consanguine,
- floor,
- succeeding,
- descend,
- process,
- prompt,
- interlacing,
- populate,
- abut,
- longitudinally,
- enchant,
- form,
- accruement,
- closing curtain,
- make out,
- mesh,
- butt,
- have it off,
- molding,
- fuck,
- diagonal,
- notwithstanding,
- stick out,
- yet,
- withal,
- edge,
- go forward,
- interwoven,
- logic gate,
- lieu,
- beforehand,
- kin,
- assistant,
- flier,
- establish,
- adopt,
- squint-eyed,
- wing,
- the likes of,
- university extension,
- admission charge,
- consecutive,
- thereabout,
- prohibited,
- come about,
- propagation,
- au fait,
- too,
- collimate,
- still,
- flat,
- remove,
- accomplice,
- touch,
- stage,
- pass off,
- lie with,
- past,
- shut down,
- almost,
- view,
- lie down,
- get at,
- hold out,
- come on,
- accessory,
- conform to,
- penny-pinching,
- file name extension,
- keep abreast,
- hail,
- slanted,
- asset,
- second thought,
- make,
- accompany,
- onwards,
- more or less,
- closelipped,
- stick to,
- delimitation,
- borderline,
- most,
- forthwith,
- at once,
- travel along,
- twinned,
- quick,
- verboten,
- cognise,
- brink,
- glucinium,
- stunned,
- bed,
- grade,
- atomic number 4,
- proscribed,
- equal,
- hereabout,
- in the adjacent apartment,
- go on,
- plane,
- take after,
- instantly,
- take place,
- survey,
- ko'd,
- reconsideration,
- same,
- growth,
- forrader,
- intimately,
- collection,
- nominate,
- spirit level,
- bear on,
- keep an eye on,
- butt against,
- flyer,
- hold up,
- close up,
- sour,
- frame,
- degree,
- akin,
- keep,
- espouse,
- issue forth,
- get it on,
- alike,
- appoint,
- squinty,
- conjointly,
- adherence,
- watch over,
- askant,
- amount,
- incorporate,
- stratum,
- side of meat,
- warm up,
- hem in,
- extension phone,
- inhabit,
- besiege,
- forward,
- prolongation,
- place,
- ardent,
- becharm,
- charm,
- machine-accessible,
- denotation,
- come up,
- assenting,
- stay,
- elbow joint,
- sib,
- conclusion,
- jazz,
- tolerate,
- extend,
- come through,
- head-to-head,
- comparatively,
- shut,
- askance,
- standardised,
- postdate,
- captivate,
- have it away,
- just about,
- interchangeable,
- get,
- institute,
- strong,
- tear down,
- au courant,
- bonk,
- coincidental,
- get along,
- layer,
- post,
- rest,
- closing,
- unaired,
- circumvent,
- blood-related,
- harp,
- bump off,
- observe,
- close-fitting,
- forrad,
- downwind,
- even so,
- position,
- arsenic,
- level off,
- entryway,
- excursus,
- contain,
- annexe,
- incline,
- correspondent,
- committed,
- knocked out,
- right away,
- in any case,
- forth river,
- every bit,
- longways,
- virtually,
- atomic number 33,
- entering,
- in the adjacent house,
- proceed,
- emit,
- sloping,
- impending,
- affixation,
- circular,
- lag,
- roughly,
- line of latitude,
- fall,
- resilient,
- straight off,
- arrive,
- rise to power,
- positive,
- fold,
- come near,
- pursue,
- imminent,
- admission fee,
- connate,
- well-nigh,
- have sex,
- digest,
- preserve,
- extension service,
- take down,
- asquint,
- filename extension,
- also,
- chase,
- fence in,
- boundary line,
- polish off,
- bond,
- cheeseparing,
- vis-a-vis,
- forbidden,
- exchangeable,
- kayoed,
- get laid,
- outgrowth,
- wall,
- astir,
- lengthways,
- ready to hand,
- reference,
- conclude,
- care,
- the like,
- now,
- unofficially,
- slay,
- recognize,
- perimeter,
- doorstep,
- sleep with,
- digression,
- stand,
- pull down,
- adjoin,
- aggregation,
- catch,
- carry on,
- margin,
- hot,
- frontwards,
- run,
- uphold,
- cognize,
- even out,
- take a breath,
- pull round,
- lateral,
- fence,
- close down,
- put up,
- member,
- add up,
- found,
- poignant,
- storey,
- onward,
- secretive,
- congener,
- atomic number 85,
- confining,
- ingress,
- stuffy,
- nip and tuck,
- lie in,
- remain,
- finale,
- unrecorded,
- good,
- dear,
- day in and day out,
- longwise,
- story,
- piece,
- beguile,
- extinct,
- approximately,
- draw close,
- joined,
- tied,
- sloped,
- fond regard,
- unwavering,
- weather,
- ilk,
- room access,
- equally,
- alive,
- meshing,
- philippic,
- followers,
- frontward,
- twin,
- lengthiness,
- bill,
- bide,
- entrance fee,
- standardized,
- unitedly,
- come out,
- or so,
- taboo,
- coinciding,
- local anesthetic,
- seminal fluid,
- telephone extension,
- full complement,
- lee side,
- face,
- trance,
- slopingly,
- in advance,
- succeed,
- hump,
- cognate word,
- adhesion,
- throwaway,
- take a breather,
- tabu,
- band together,
- faithful,
- come together,
- embody,
- fastening,
- lay,
- stick with,
- personify,
- come in,
- fall out,
- out front,
- tier,
- moulding,
- w. c. handy,
- pose,
- pursuit,
- posture,
- play along,
- bang,
- congenator,
- retain,
- simultaneously,
- cancelled,
- memory access,
- undermentioned,
- coincident,
- horizontal surface,
- as well,
- locating,
- slope,
- blood relative,
- assemblage,
- interim,
- edgewise,
- environs,
- put,
- away,
- draw near,
- brave,
- have intercourse,
- tirade,
- make it,
- flush,
- come out of the closet,
- make up,
- athwart,
- status,
- in the lead,
- cover,
- approach,
- keep on,
- straightaway,
- last,
- spatial relation,
- incoming,
- ejaculate,
- apart,
- leading,
- smother,
- collaborator,
- slantways,
- appurtenant,
- coordinated,
- brook,
- bewitch,
- march,
- situation,
- be intimate,
- respire,
- nonetheless,
- pull through,
- suffer,
- airless,
- blood relation,
- plant,
- bear,
- parenthesis,
- some,
- spellbind,
- squint,
- wish,
- all the same,
- persist,
- patch,
- location,
- summation,
- live on,
- stead,
- analog,
- finis,
- environment,
- congeneric,
- entrance money,
- semen,
- spot,
- skinny,
- approximate,
- step-up,
- co-ordinated,
- fill up,
- sideway,
- berth,
- cum,
- brood,
- springy,
- closemouthed,
- analogue,
- sleep together,
- gain,
- acknowledge,
- tightlipped,
- round,
- derive,
- catch one's breath,
- on board,
- cost,
- in front,
- co-occurrent,
- just as,
- watch,
- surveil,
- die hard,
- verge,
- name,
- divagation,
- meantime,
- snug,
- brave out,
- human elbow,
- wear,
- tight,
- fascinate,
- elongation,
- to one side,
- accompaniment,
- entranceway,
- set,
- placement,
- stomach,
- come after,
- finish,
- surroundings,
- capture,
- ancillary,
- environ,
- emplacement,
- future,
- charge,
- even
Synonym alongside
Meaning of alongside in English:
alongside
Pronunciation /əlɒŋˈsʌɪd/
Translate alongside into Spanish
preposition
(also North Americanalongside of)
1Close to the side of; next to.
‘she was sitting alongside him’
- ‘the boat came alongside’
- ‘In addition to this, improvements will be made to the adjacent slip road alongside Kew Bridge.’
- ‘Cahill asked in his smooth voice, sliding into the passenger side seat alongside Gemmel.’
- ‘It was possible to swim alongside the side of the wreck and look down towards the seabed.’
- ‘When you are driving keep your eye out for a beach trail and cars parked alongside the road.’
- ‘Stay on the coast path as you pass alongside magnificent coastal scenery.’
- ‘Our car thuds over the worn grass and hills alongside the road, jerking us up and down.’
- ‘The car pulled in and parked alongside the road in front of some quaint little shops.’
- ‘Rain early Thursday has made the mud and piling garbage alongside roads stickier and stinkier.’
- ‘He said the action plan set challenging targets to enhance wildlife habits alongside Britain's roads.’
- ‘With the sun rising higher and splashing across the water, black porpoise dorsals soar and dip alongside the boat.’
- ‘His vision includes a relief road to run alongside the railway, cycleways and the improvement of amenities.’
- ‘A road could be built alongside Fulford golf course and exit onto the bypass, or exit onto Heslington Lane.’
- ‘He said he had personally noticed that the local farmer had had to rebuild the wall alongside the road on almost a monthly basis.’
- ‘Usually alongside a busy road, these places are perfect for supping ale and eating crisps in the baking hot sun.’
- ‘Their greatest concern is the proposal to construct a new access road alongside the village play area.’
- ‘The small tuna boat is alongside us throwing bait and it seems our marlin has turned into a tuna.’
- ‘I drew my bike up alongside Leonard's as the path widened on the far side of the pond.’
- ‘If the defender is in front or alongside the shooter, the ball is very exposed for a block.’
- ‘Scott says he sort of inherited the field alongside the shop that has become his farm.’
- ‘Pulling alongside them she and Rachel gave them a small wave and then they drove off.’
beside, by the side of, on the edge of, alongside, next to, adjacent to, close by, in a line by, one after the other by
- 1.1Together and in cooperation with.
‘a care assistant was working alongside him’
- ‘If we can do it alone we will, but we're willing to work alongside anyone who wants to co-operate.’
- ‘Often working alongside estate agents, YPP offers three levels of intervention.’
- ‘They had a head start in that their assistant manager Ian Butterworth used to play alongside Prior at Norwich City.’
- ‘I'd play either with one of two forwards, but we are generally used to playing Chris or John alongside Henrik.’
- ‘Morrison will write the script for the film, in which actors will star alongside the computer generated animals.’
- ‘Red ribbons, alongside black, will truly mean something in London today.’
- ‘Kerr has said he is considering starting John O'Shea alongside Keane in midfield, but it is unlikely he will do so.’
- ‘I don't think the stores would mind, and I'm sure they would enjoy the joke alongside all the customers.’
- ‘Like, have they not read about the Greek theory that soldiers actually fought better alongside the men they loved?’
- ‘Kitt will also kick off the event by playing alongside Jerry Fish on Thursday night.’
- ‘Will Greenwood returns from international duty and takes his place in the centre alongside Dafydd James.’
- ‘A security officer, David worked alongside his mum for about four years before getting fulltime work.’
- ‘She is to star alongside Jane Lapotaire in the drama, as yet untitled.’
- ‘It's been nice to play alongside my mates, rather than just colleagues.’
- ‘They will research, write and perform the works, alongside professionals.’
- ‘Veteran runner Marie will be running alongside a number of staff from Bury Hospice, for whom she is raising money.’
- ‘Local bands Greasy Hogwash and Marner Brown played alongside Reggie Balmoral for over three hours.’
- ‘Javed Khan, advice centre co-ordinator, worked alongside Jane while she was a volunteer.’
- ‘His role, unlike the musicologist Cooke, has been as a composer working alongside Elgar's ghost.’
- ‘He says he is not going to preach but to work and live alongside the people because that is what is holy.’
alongside, alongside each other, beside each other, abreast, level, shoulder to shoulder, cheek by jowl, together, close together
- 1.2At the same time as or in coexistence with.
‘they aim to encourage coverage of disabled sport alongside able-bodied achievement’
- ‘The appointment of a minister to embrace tourism alongside culture and sport is quite enough.’
- ‘It is no accident that the rise of Fantasy has gone alongside the development of digital FX.’
- ‘We focused mainly on set-up and aero development, alongside tyre testing for Magny Cours.’
- ‘It was developed alongside speech recognition technology acquired from SoftSound last year.’
- ‘Quality indicators therefore have to be developed using other evidence alongside expert opinion.’
- ‘Later, Sartre developed existentialism alongside a growing interest in Marxism.’
- ‘It was usual practice for the finishing trades of the bleachers and dyers to develop alongside hosiery.’
- ‘And the passport service is developing a passport card to issue alongside the passport book.’
- ‘What sort of work might he be doing alongside or in contrast to the research reported here?’
- ‘Probably the best the reader can do is to consult both volumes alongside each other.’
- ‘He has single-handedly kept Salford afloat, doing his level best alongside the big guns.’
- ‘Didsbury, however, will have a say in the assistants' finals, which runs alongside the main event.’
- ‘The poodle participated in the dog dressing and beauty competition held alongside the dog show.’
- ‘Limitless quantities of easy-drinking home-made wine was served alongside to wash it all down.’
- ‘Drivers should consider the size of a breakdown provider's network alongside price when choosing cover.’
- ‘First, there is the desire of the new books to contain the best of the old alongside the new.’
- ‘Lithium can be used alongside careful monitoring of blood levels to prevent side effects.’
- ‘Marriage followed alongside a comfortable life on the cosy road to middle-class success.’
- ‘There you have a basic beginning, tap dance continued to grow alongside the music that it was danced to.’
- ‘So it is with no bias that he has programmed four home-grown shows alongside the exotic imports in this year's event.’
Meaning of alongside in English
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
From the Cambridge English Corpus
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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Example sentences of the word alongside
1. Adverb
Ramsay got into kickass shape using military-style workouts and now competes alongside Tana every year in grueling Ironman competitions.
2. Adjective
Scissor trusses are often installed right alongside traditional trusses when framing a roof system.
3. Preposition or subordinating conjunction
Use the hoe to dig a two-inch furrow alongside the row of onions, but four inches away.
4. Verb, base form
Serve alone, over a bed of rice or alongside our Buddha Veggie Rice Bowl or Colorful Rice-Pilaf.
Quotes containing the word alongside
1. Even in modern art, artists have used methods based on calculation, inasmuch as these elements, alongside those of a more personal and emotional nature, give balance and harmony to any work of art.
- Max Bill
2. And it's Gryfindor in possession again, as Johnson takes the Quaffle— Flint alongside her —poke him in the eye, Angelina —it was a joke, professor, it was a joke...
- J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
3. I had a dream about you. You took a cruise, and I took a canoe. I paddled alongside your ship out into the Atlantic Ocean and down to the Caribbean. I shouted “I love you” the whole way, but you couldn’t hear me, probably because that man you were with was talking the whole time.
- Jarod Kintz, We Had A #Dream About You